Female
attendees to the BARMM inauguration last March 29 included supporters of the
MILF and kins of combatants. (Photo by
Office of the Presidential Adviser on Peace, Reconciliation and Unity)
MAGUINDANAO --- Babu
Psung, 60, from Sultan Sa Barongis, Maguindanao, was among the hundreds of
Bangsamoro residents who witnessed the inauguration of the Bangsamoro
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao on March 29. She is the wife of a grizzled
MILF combatant.
In
an interview, she shared her journey from being a perennial evacuee or “bakwit”
of armed conflict to becoming a catalyst of peace and development. She
attributes this life-changing transformation to the gains of the peace process.
Babu
Psung recalled how she and her family lived in constant fear of when the next
armed conflict will break out in the community. She had never gotten used to
the sound of gunfire although her husband had been a combatant long before they
were married.
This
is the reason why she could not hold back her tears when she learned that her
family will finally be leaving behind a dark chapter in their lives.
With
the formal decommissioning of her husbands and thousands of MILF fighters, she
believes that the Bangsamaoro people can look ahead to a brighter future.
"Natuntayan
nami dn sa noget den a nyabay (decomissioning) na ipedtagu dn su mga tambak ka
di ren penggamiten; dikna ip'd-surender uged na ip'dtagu (We already learned that
this (decommissioning) will put weapons beyond use. This is not to surrender
them but just to set them aside.)," she said.
Asked
about her expectations on how the next steps of the process will affect them,
she answered, "Nya katundug na kabagenggay sa mga project a para sa tanan.
Dikna maya ipendwal bu isa-isa uged a project a magamit nu madakel para sa
uyag-uyag (The next phase is the implementation of projects for all. These are
not dole outs but livelihood projects that will benefit everyone.),” she added.
She
said her whole family and the rest of their community fully support the
Normalization Track, adding they are ready and excited for the decommissioning
process to begin.
‘We
are ready’
Meanwhile,
among the combatants who are set to undergo the decommissioning process is Bapa
Imam, 60, who became a combatant since the Martial Law era.
Imam
recounted the hardships he and his comrades experienced during the decades-long
armed struggle.
"Mabagel
ged i kab'ng-gyera sa'ntu a timpu, malegen i natala name (Battles were intense
during those times. It was a hard time for us.),” he said.
When
asked on how he felt that the Bangsamoro people have achieved their long held
dream of genuine and meaningful self-governance and will be part of the
decommissioning process, he said, "Nya nami ganggiginawa samaya na gapyay
ginawa nami sa nasampay nami pan inya (We feel genuinely happy that we are able
to witness [these milestones]).”
Imam
concluded by expressing the collective aspirstions of the combatants to be decommissioned:
"Kab'ng gobyerno anya na mana bun ig - u malebug sa pulu na malebug bun
taman sa baba. Pangeni-Ngenin ta na mapya i proseso ka 'ndu malingaw i
katamanan (Governance can be compared to running water; fuzzy water upstream
leads to fuzzy water downstream. Let us pray that clear processes will guide us
along the way).”
Normalization Track
The
major components under the Normalization Track are security, socio-economic
development, confidence-building, and Transitional Justice and Reconciliation.
The
Joint Normalization Committee (JNC), which is under the oversight of the Office
of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process (OPAPP), will oversee the
conduct of activities under the Normalization Track of the Comprehensive
Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB).
The
CAB was signed by the Philippine Government and the MILF in 2014, which ended
more than four decades of armed conflict in Mindanao. (OPAPRU PR) (OPAPRU PR / MINDANAO EXPOSE’)
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